Homebrewing is more than just a means to make your own beer. There are several different layers to this hobby, and ultimately, you end up learning about a lot more than the four ingredients that make beer.

But before you can start making beer at home, you'll need some homebrewing equipment. As with any hobby, homebrewing can be as simple or as complex as you want to make it.

In addition to the homebrewing setups listed below, you'll also want some empty bottles, bottle caps, and a bottle capper to package and carbonate your homebrewed suds. Amazon has plenty of homebrew bottling setups. One that includes a bottling bucket with spigot, an auto siphon, and a filling wand should do the trick, though -- such as this kit here.

Homebrewing systems for beginners

Extract starter kits

The easiest way to get started brewing your own beer at home is to use extract kits. Essentially, all you need is a fermentation vessel, a boil kettle, and a few other odds and ends, all of which are typically included in starter kits.

Something like this $70 kit works for someone who already has a pot big enough to boil a couple of gallons of liquid. If a pot is needed, then this $140 kit is more than enough to get started.

A basic cooler setup

For someone who wants to make the switch from extract brewing, or perhaps skip extract brewing altogether, to all-grain brewing, a basic setup that a lot of brewers start with consists of two slightly modified water coolers.

One cooler is used to hold the sparge water, while the other cooler is where the grains are steeped in hot water for a set amount of time (usually 60 minutes), to extract as much sugar from the grain as possible.

A boil kettle and a heat source, most likely a propane burner, are still needed to round out this all grain brewing setup, but the core of an all-grain setup is the mash tun and hot liquor tank.

Mash & Boil

The $299 Mash & Boil is an all-in-one system for all-grain or extract brewers. The 1600W heating element can be slow to heat water and get to a boil, but it does the job as long as you have some patience.

The appeal to an all-in-one system is that it's easy to clean up and store when not in use, and doesn't require a dedicated brewing space. And, of course, ditching propane burners and moving brewing indoors is always a big plus for those who live in colder climates during the winter months.

At just under $1,000, it's not the most affordable system for someone just starting to brew his or her own beer. However, it comes with everything from a pump to a counterflow chiller, required to quickly cool the wort before you can add the yeast that turns the wort from a sugary liquid to beer.

A kettle and a bag

When using the brew in a bag (BIAB) method, the brewer adds grains to a bag that's then placed in a kettle that contains hot water. At the end of the mash, typically 60 minutes, the bag is lifted out and the wort is boiled and hops are added.

MoreBeer sales a prebuilt BIAB setup that includes a kettle, all necessary ball valves, and a mesh bag. The only thing you need to supply is a burner. The $99 8.5-gallon version is big enough for 5-gallon batches of beer. The $149 14-gallon model is big enough to make 10 gallons of beer at a time.

There's a common thread to IBM's and Microsoft pending respective acquisitions of Red Hat and GitHub: both are pillars of the open source world, and neither wants to destroy their open source credibility. There's a good precedent for where IBM and Microsoft might take their cues: the craft brewing world, where the big guys don't want to destroy the identities of the independent brands they've bought.

With the legal status of medical and recreational marijuana in constant flux, and varying wildly from state to state, the opportunities and risks of this market are mind-alteringly complex. Here are the basics.

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